<p>Most colleges do offer some courses for non-science majors, give one of those a try. You can do something like geology or astronomy. My D1 took some kind of biology course where they studied things like the impact of white tailed deer in the area of the country where her college was located, and also collected insects. Which she might not have gravitated to before, but she actually really got into it. “Gotta go, mom, I just spotted an earwig and I have to capture it!”. She even taught her little sister about entomology the next summer, and the younger one did it as a hobby all the way through high school. So you can do a lot of things in science that aren’t hard core but are interesting. Most colleges have some kind of quantitative or science distribution requirements anyway – sometimes those types of science courses satisfy both of those requirements.</p>